A successful lifestyle brand speaks to the core identity of its customers. Individuals each have their own sense of self, based on their background (e.g. ethnicity, social class, subculture, nationality, etc.). A lifestyle brand provides a powerful supplement to this core identity, by allowing the individual to publicly associate themselves with the brand.
A prototypical lifestyle brand is Abercrombie & Fitch. A&F has created a lifestyle based on a preppy, young Ivy League lifestyle. Their retail outlets reflect this lifestyle through their luxurious store environment, admirable store associates (models), and their ever-famous black and white photographs featuring young people living the Abercrombie lifestyle. In doing so, Abercrombie & Fitch has created an outlet for those who lead, or wish to lead this lifestyle.
One popular source for lifestyle brands is national identity. Victoria's Secret purposely evoked the English upper class in its initial branding efforts, while Louis Vuitton continues to draw on the opulent tradition of the French aristocracy.
Another source of lifestyle brands is subcultures. Burton has built its lifestyle brand by drawing on the snowboarding subculture and Quiksilver has done the same with the surfing community.
A lifestyle brand is like a magnet that attracts people with certain philosophies and lifestyles to buy the products that this brand promotes. Magnetic Marketing is the process of transforming brands into magnets that attract people with certain philosophies and lifestyles to buy the products that these brands promote.
Brands that stand for a certain philosophies and lifestyles create emotional connections with these individuals who believe in the same philosophies and live the same lifestyles and attract them in the same way that magnets attract metallic objects. The power of magnetic fields that these brands create depends on the strength of the position that these brands stand for in the mind of these individuals.
It appears that for some companies, an important component of becoming a lifestyle brand is expanding their product line to their company name and image with several products associated with a group or culture. Examples include Calvin Klein licensing its name to a perfume called CKOne, and Harley Davidson selling branded merchandise to its customers. By this measure, other successful lifestyle brands include Caterpillar, John Deere, Abercrombie & Fitch, and Gucci.
Although lifestyle brands are relatively uncommon in the electronics and computer industries, Apple became a lifestyle brand after it expanded its market share into the music industry through its iPod digital music player. The iPod and the ubiquitous white headphones included are also deemed a fashion accessory by some and may be considered a status symbol, although this is somewhat debatable.
BMW is an automobile manufacturer that has been successful in becoming a lifestyle brand, branching out into the sports and fitness segment with bicycles, skateboards, apparel and various fashion accessories. BMW's subsidiary, MINI has also integrated itself as a lifestyle brand in much the same way.